The Satrapy
Constantine P. Cavafy
What a misfortune, although you are made for fine and great works this unjust fate of yours always denies you encouragement and success; that base customs should block you; and pettiness and indifference. And how terrible the day when you yield (the day when you give up and yield), and you leave on foot for Susa, and you go to the monarch Artaxerxes who favorably places you in his court, and offers you satrapies and the like. And you accept them with despair these things that you do not want. Your soul seeks other things, weeps for other things; the praise of the public and the Sophists, the hard-won and inestimable Well Done; the Agora, the Theater, and the Laurels. How can Artaxerxes give you these, where will you find these in a satrapy; and what life can you live without these.
Next 10 Poems
- Constantine P. Cavafy : The Windows
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Thermopylae
- Constantine P. Cavafy : They Should Have Provided
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Those Who Fought For The Achaean League
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Trojans
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Understanding
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Very Seldom
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Voices
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Waiting For The Barbarians
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Walls
Previous 10 Poems
- Constantine P. Cavafy : The God Abandons Antony
- Constantine P. Cavafy : The First Step
- Constantine P. Cavafy : The City
- Constantine P. Cavafy : The Bandaged Shoulder
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Supplication
- Constantine P. Cavafy : So Much I Gazed
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Since Nine O'clock
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Return
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Remember, Body...
- Constantine P. Cavafy : Priest At The Serapeum